Re: $$Excel-Macros$$ VLOOKUP AND HLOOKUP and MACROS

2014-10-08 Thread Kumar Kishore
Dear Sir,

Thank you for your kind co-operation and feedback and response.

But i don't know Basics.

Kindly advice us.

Regards,

Deva Rayudu

On Tue, Oct 7, 2014 at 6:42 PM, Paul Schreiner schreiner_p...@att.net
wrote:

 That's what we're here for... (helping)
 But it's also guidance for selp help.

 If we can show you where to FIND what you're looking for, you don't have
 to wait for one of us to respond!

 Plus, often when you're looking for a solution to the problem in front of
 you,
 you come across answers to questions you haven't even asked (yet)!

 let us know if you have trouble, or need an explanation as to how (or why)
 something works.

 *Paul*
 -







 *“Do all the good you can,By all the means you can,In all the ways you
 can,In all the places you can,At all the times you can,To all the people
 you can,As long as ever you can.” - John Wesley*
 -

*From:* Kumar Kishore kishore...@gmail.com
 *To:* excel-macros@googlegroups.com
 *Sent:* Tuesday, October 7, 2014 5:23 AM
 *Subject:* Re: $$Excel-Macros$$ VLOOKUP AND HLOOKUP and MACROS

 Dear Sirs,

 Thank you so much.

 I Will learn from you. from today onwards.

 Regards,
 Kishore.



 On Mon, Oct 6, 2014 at 5:23 PM, Paul Schreiner schreiner_p...@att.net
 wrote:

 I can probably handle explaining Vlookup and Hlookup,
 but to teach macros???

 That's what this group is for!
 The techniques of using macros is a subject about which many books have
 been written
 and thousands (and thousands) of emails have been shared.

 There's really no single way to teach macros.
 The first step is to have a PURPOSE.
 A task you want to accomplish.
 Usually, some repetative or tedious task you wish to automate.

 Then, you proceed to write VBA code to perform this task.
 (often by turning on the macro recorder while you perform some tasks
 manually)

 As for VLookup and HLookup:

 The fact that you turned to a group such as this, with such a general
 question is concerning.

 Have you ever used the Function Wizard?
 The Help on this function link at the bottom of the Insert Function
 panel is actually very helpful.

 for VLOOKUP, you get:
 Syntax

 VLOOKUP(lookup_value, table_array, col_index_num, [range_lookup])

 The VLOOKUP function syntax has the following arguments (argument: A
 value that provides information to an action, an event, a method, a
 property, a function, or a procedure.):

- *lookup_value* Required. The value to search in the first column of
the table or range. The *lookup_value* argument can be a value or a
reference. If the value you supply for the l*ookup_value* argument is
smaller than the smallest value in the first column of the
*table_array* argument, *VLOOKUP* returns the #N/A error value.
- *table_array* Required. The range of cells that contains the data.
You can use a reference to a range (for example, *A2:D8*), or a range
name. The values in the first column of *table_array* are the values
searched by *lookup_value*. These values can be text, numbers, or
logical values. Uppercase and lowercase text are equivalent.
- *col_index_num* Required. The column number in the *table_array*
argument from which the matching value must be returned. A
*col_index_num* argument of 1 returns the value in the first column in
*table_array*; a *col_index_num* of 2 returns the value in the second
column in *table_array*, and so on.

 If the *col_index_num* argument is:

- Less than 1, *VLOOKUP* returns the #VALUE! error value.
- Greater than the number of columns in *table_array*, *VLOOKUP*
returns the #REF! error value.


- *range_lookup* Optional. A logical value that specifies whether you
want *VLOOKUP* to find an exact match or an approximate match:


- If *range_lookup* is either TRUE or is omitted, an exact or
approximate match is returned. If an exact match is not found, the next
largest value that is less than *lookup_value* is returned.


 *Paul*
 -







 *“Do all the good you can,By all the means you can,In all the ways you
 can,In all the places you can,At all the times you can,To all the people
 you can,As long as ever you can.” - John Wesley*
 -

*From:* Kumar Kishore kishore...@gmail.com
 *To:* excel-macros@googlegroups.com
 *Sent:* Sunday, October 5, 2014 6:13 AM
 *Subject:* $$Excel-Macros$$ VLOOKUP AND HLOOKUP and MACROS

 Dear Masters,

 Please teach the following functions:-

 1. VLOOKUP
 2. HLOOKUP and
 3.  MACROS


 Thank in advance


 Regards,

 Kishore
 --
 Are you =EXP(E:RT) or =NOT(EXP(E:RT)) in Excel? And do you wanna be? It’s
 =TIME(2,DO:IT,N:OW) ! Join official Facebook page of this forum @
 https://www.facebook.com/discussexcel

 FORUM RULES

 1) Use concise, accurate thread titles. Poor thread titles, like Please
 Help, Urgent, Need Help, Formula Problem, Code

Re: $$Excel-Macros$$ VLOOKUP AND HLOOKUP and MACROS

2014-10-08 Thread Ganesh N
Dear Kumar,

There are lot of tutorial / training documents. Just google it.

Regards,
Ganesh N

On Wed, Oct 8, 2014 at 3:21 PM, Kumar Kishore kishore...@gmail.com wrote:

 Dear Sir,

 Thank you for your kind co-operation and feedback and response.

 But i don't know Basics.

 Kindly advice us.

 Regards,

 Deva Rayudu

 On Tue, Oct 7, 2014 at 6:42 PM, Paul Schreiner schreiner_p...@att.net
 wrote:

 That's what we're here for... (helping)
 But it's also guidance for selp help.

 If we can show you where to FIND what you're looking for, you don't have
 to wait for one of us to respond!

 Plus, often when you're looking for a solution to the problem in front of
 you,
 you come across answers to questions you haven't even asked (yet)!

 let us know if you have trouble, or need an explanation as to how (or
 why) something works.

 *Paul*
 -







 *“Do all the good you can,By all the means you can,In all the ways you
 can,In all the places you can,At all the times you can,To all the people
 you can,As long as ever you can.” - John Wesley*
 -

*From:* Kumar Kishore kishore...@gmail.com
 *To:* excel-macros@googlegroups.com
 *Sent:* Tuesday, October 7, 2014 5:23 AM
 *Subject:* Re: $$Excel-Macros$$ VLOOKUP AND HLOOKUP and MACROS

 Dear Sirs,

 Thank you so much.

 I Will learn from you. from today onwards.

 Regards,
 Kishore.



 On Mon, Oct 6, 2014 at 5:23 PM, Paul Schreiner schreiner_p...@att.net
 wrote:

 I can probably handle explaining Vlookup and Hlookup,
 but to teach macros???

 That's what this group is for!
 The techniques of using macros is a subject about which many books have
 been written
 and thousands (and thousands) of emails have been shared.

 There's really no single way to teach macros.
 The first step is to have a PURPOSE.
 A task you want to accomplish.
 Usually, some repetative or tedious task you wish to automate.

 Then, you proceed to write VBA code to perform this task.
 (often by turning on the macro recorder while you perform some tasks
 manually)

 As for VLookup and HLookup:

 The fact that you turned to a group such as this, with such a general
 question is concerning.

 Have you ever used the Function Wizard?
 The Help on this function link at the bottom of the Insert Function
 panel is actually very helpful.

 for VLOOKUP, you get:
 Syntax

 VLOOKUP(lookup_value, table_array, col_index_num, [range_lookup])

 The VLOOKUP function syntax has the following arguments (argument: A
 value that provides information to an action, an event, a method, a
 property, a function, or a procedure.):

- *lookup_value* Required. The value to search in the first column of
the table or range. The *lookup_value* argument can be a value or a
reference. If the value you supply for the l*ookup_value* argument is
smaller than the smallest value in the first column of the
*table_array* argument, *VLOOKUP* returns the #N/A error value.
- *table_array* Required. The range of cells that contains the data.
You can use a reference to a range (for example, *A2:D8*), or a range
name. The values in the first column of *table_array* are the values
searched by *lookup_value*. These values can be text, numbers, or
logical values. Uppercase and lowercase text are equivalent.
- *col_index_num* Required. The column number in the *table_array*
argument from which the matching value must be returned. A
*col_index_num* argument of 1 returns the value in the first column
in *table_array*; a *col_index_num* of 2 returns the value in the
second column in *table_array*, and so on.

 If the *col_index_num* argument is:

- Less than 1, *VLOOKUP* returns the #VALUE! error value.
- Greater than the number of columns in *table_array*, *VLOOKUP*
returns the #REF! error value.


- *range_lookup* Optional. A logical value that specifies whether you
want *VLOOKUP* to find an exact match or an approximate match:


- If *range_lookup* is either TRUE or is omitted, an exact or
approximate match is returned. If an exact match is not found, the next
largest value that is less than *lookup_value* is returned.


 *Paul*
 -







 *“Do all the good you can,By all the means you can,In all the ways you
 can,In all the places you can,At all the times you can,To all the people
 you can,As long as ever you can.” - John Wesley*
 -

*From:* Kumar Kishore kishore...@gmail.com
 *To:* excel-macros@googlegroups.com
 *Sent:* Sunday, October 5, 2014 6:13 AM
 *Subject:* $$Excel-Macros$$ VLOOKUP AND HLOOKUP and MACROS

 Dear Masters,

 Please teach the following functions:-

 1. VLOOKUP
 2. HLOOKUP and
 3.  MACROS


 Thank in advance


 Regards,

 Kishore
 --
 Are you =EXP(E:RT) or =NOT(EXP(E:RT)) in Excel? And do you wanna be? It’s
 =TIME(2,DO:IT,N:OW) ! Join official Facebook page of this forum

Re: $$Excel-Macros$$ VLOOKUP AND HLOOKUP and MACROS

2014-10-07 Thread Kumar Kishore
Dear Sirs,

Thank you so much.

I Will learn from you. from today onwards.

Regards,
Kishore.

On Mon, Oct 6, 2014 at 5:23 PM, Paul Schreiner schreiner_p...@att.net
wrote:

 I can probably handle explaining Vlookup and Hlookup,
 but to teach macros???

 That's what this group is for!
 The techniques of using macros is a subject about which many books have
 been written
 and thousands (and thousands) of emails have been shared.

 There's really no single way to teach macros.
 The first step is to have a PURPOSE.
 A task you want to accomplish.
 Usually, some repetative or tedious task you wish to automate.

 Then, you proceed to write VBA code to perform this task.
 (often by turning on the macro recorder while you perform some tasks
 manually)

 As for VLookup and HLookup:

 The fact that you turned to a group such as this, with such a general
 question is concerning.

 Have you ever used the Function Wizard?
 The Help on this function link at the bottom of the Insert Function
 panel is actually very helpful.

 for VLOOKUP, you get:
 Syntax

 VLOOKUP(lookup_value, table_array, col_index_num, [range_lookup])

 The VLOOKUP function syntax has the following arguments (argument: A
 value that provides information to an action, an event, a method, a
 property, a function, or a procedure.):

- *lookup_value* Required. The value to search in the first column of
the table or range. The *lookup_value* argument can be a value or a
reference. If the value you supply for the l*ookup_value* argument is
smaller than the smallest value in the first column of the
*table_array* argument, *VLOOKUP* returns the #N/A error value.
- *table_array* Required. The range of cells that contains the data.
You can use a reference to a range (for example, *A2:D8*), or a range
name. The values in the first column of *table_array* are the values
searched by *lookup_value*. These values can be text, numbers, or
logical values. Uppercase and lowercase text are equivalent.
- *col_index_num* Required. The column number in the *table_array*
argument from which the matching value must be returned. A
*col_index_num* argument of 1 returns the value in the first column in
*table_array*; a *col_index_num* of 2 returns the value in the second
column in *table_array*, and so on.

 If the *col_index_num* argument is:

- Less than 1, *VLOOKUP* returns the #VALUE! error value.
- Greater than the number of columns in *table_array*, *VLOOKUP*
returns the #REF! error value.


- *range_lookup* Optional. A logical value that specifies whether you
want *VLOOKUP* to find an exact match or an approximate match:
   - If *range_lookup* is either TRUE or is omitted, an exact or
   approximate match is returned. If an exact match is not found, the next
   largest value that is less than *lookup_value* is returned.


 *Paul*
 -







 *“Do all the good you can,By all the means you can,In all the ways you
 can,In all the places you can,At all the times you can,To all the people
 you can,As long as ever you can.” - John Wesley*
 -

*From:* Kumar Kishore kishore...@gmail.com
 *To:* excel-macros@googlegroups.com
 *Sent:* Sunday, October 5, 2014 6:13 AM
 *Subject:* $$Excel-Macros$$ VLOOKUP AND HLOOKUP and MACROS

 Dear Masters,

 Please teach the following functions:-

 1. VLOOKUP
 2. HLOOKUP and
 3.  MACROS


 Thank in advance


 Regards,

 Kishore
 --
 Are you =EXP(E:RT) or =NOT(EXP(E:RT)) in Excel? And do you wanna be? It’s
 =TIME(2,DO:IT,N:OW) ! Join official Facebook page of this forum @
 https://www.facebook.com/discussexcel

 FORUM RULES

 1) Use concise, accurate thread titles. Poor thread titles, like Please
 Help, Urgent, Need Help, Formula Problem, Code Problem, and Need Advice
 will not get quick attention or may not be answered.
 2) Don't post a question in the thread of another member.
 3) Don't post questions regarding breaking or bypassing any security
 measure.
 4) Acknowledge the responses you receive, good or bad.
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Re: $$Excel-Macros$$ VLOOKUP AND HLOOKUP and MACROS

2014-10-07 Thread Paul Schreiner
That's what we're here for... (helping)
But it's also guidance for selp help.
 
If we can show you where to FIND what you're looking for, you don't have to 
wait for one of us to respond!
 
Plus, often when you're looking for a solution to the problem in front of you,
you come across answers to questions you haven't even asked (yet)!
 
let us know if you have trouble, or need an explanation as to how (or why) 
something works. 

Paul
-
“Do all the good you can,
By all the means you can,
In all the ways you can,
In all the places you can,
At all the times you can,
To all the people you can,
As long as ever you can.” - John Wesley
-



 From: Kumar Kishore kishore...@gmail.com
To: excel-macros@googlegroups.com 
Sent: Tuesday, October 7, 2014 5:23 AM
Subject: Re: $$Excel-Macros$$ VLOOKUP AND HLOOKUP and MACROS
  


Dear Sirs,

Thank you so much.

I Will learn from you. from today onwards.

Regards,
Kishore.






On Mon, Oct 6, 2014 at 5:23 PM, Paul Schreiner schreiner_p...@att.net wrote:

I can probably handle explaining Vlookup and Hlookup,
but to teach macros???

That's what this group is for!
The techniques of using macros is a subject about which many books have been 
written
and thousands (and thousands) of emails have been shared.

There's really no single way to teach macros.
The first step is to have a PURPOSE.
A task you want to accomplish. 
Usually, some repetative or tedious task you wish to automate.

Then, you proceed to write VBA code to perform this task.
(often by turning on the macro recorder while you perform some tasks manually)

As for VLookup and HLookup:

The fact that you turned to a group such as this, with such a general 
question is concerning.

Have you ever used the Function Wizard?
The Help on this function link at the bottom of the Insert Function panel 
is actually very helpful.

for VLOOKUP, you get:
Syntax
VLOOKUP(lookup_value, table_array, col_index_num, [range_lookup])
The VLOOKUP function syntax has the following arguments(argument: A value 
that provides information to an action, an event, a method, a property, a 
function, or a procedure.):
  * lookup_value Required. The value to search in the first column of the 
 table or range. The lookup_value argument can be a value or a reference. If 
 the value you supply for the lookup_value argument is smaller than the 
 smallest value in the first column of the table_array argument, VLOOKUP 
 returns the #N/A error value.
  * table_array Required. The range of cells that contains the data. You 
 can use a reference to a range (for example, A2:D8), or a range name. The 
 values in the first column of table_array are the values searched by 
 lookup_value. These values can be text, numbers, or logical values. 
 Uppercase and lowercase text are equivalent. 
  * col_index_num Required. The column number in the table_array argument 
 from which the matching value must be returned. A col_index_num argument of 
 1 returns the value in the first column in table_array; a col_index_num of 2 
 returns the value in the second column in table_array, and so on.
If the col_index_num argument is:
  * Less than 1, VLOOKUP returns the #VALUE! error value.
  * Greater than the number of columns in table_array, VLOOKUP returns 
 the #REF! error value.
  * range_lookup Optional. A logical value that specifies whether you 
 want VLOOKUP to find an exact match or an approximate match:
  * If range_lookup is either TRUE or is omitted, an exact or approximate 
 match is returned. If an exact match is not found, the next largest value 
 that is less than lookup_value is returned. 

Paul
-
“Do all the good you can,
By all the means you can,
In all the ways you can,
In all the places you can,
At all the times you can,
To all the people you can,
As long as ever you can.” - John Wesley
-


 From: Kumar Kishore kishore...@gmail.com
To: excel-macros@googlegroups.com 
Sent: Sunday, October 5, 2014 6:13 AM
Subject: $$Excel-Macros$$ VLOOKUP AND HLOOKUP and MACROS
 


Dear Masters,

Please teach the following functions:-

1. VLOOKUP
2. HLOOKUP and
3.  MACROS



Thank in advance



Regards,


Kishore

-- 
Are you =EXP(E:RT) or =NOT(EXP(E:RT)) in Excel? And do you wanna be? It’s 
=TIME(2,DO:IT,N:OW) ! Join official Facebook page of this forum @ 
https://www.facebook.com/discussexcel
 
FORUM RULES
 
1) Use concise, accurate thread titles. Poor thread titles, like Please 
Help, Urgent, Need Help, Formula Problem, Code Problem, and Need Advice will 
not get quick attention or may not be answered.
2) Don't post a question in the thread of another member.
3) Don't post questions regarding breaking or bypassing any security measure.
4) Acknowledge the responses you receive, good or bad.
5) Jobs posting is not allowed.
6) Sharing copyrighted material

Re: $$Excel-Macros$$ VLOOKUP AND HLOOKUP and MACROS

2014-10-06 Thread Paul Schreiner
I can probably handle explaining Vlookup and Hlookup,
but to teach macros???
 
That's what this group is for!
The techniques of using macros is a subject about which many books have been 
written
and thousands (and thousands) of emails have been shared.
 
There's really no single way to teach macros.
The first step is to have a PURPOSE.
A task you want to accomplish. 
Usually, some repetative or tedious task you wish to automate.
 
Then, you proceed to write VBA code to perform this task.
(often by turning on the macro recorder while you perform some tasks manually)
 
As for VLookup and HLookup:
 
The fact that you turned to a group such as this, with such a general question 
is concerning.
 
Have you ever used the Function Wizard?
The Help on this function link at the bottom of the Insert Function panel is 
actually very helpful.
 
for VLOOKUP, you get:
Syntax
VLOOKUP(lookup_value, table_array, col_index_num, [range_lookup])
The VLOOKUP function syntax has the following arguments(argument: A value that 
provides information to an action, an event, a method, a property, a function, 
or a procedure.):
* lookup_value Required. The value to search in the first column of the 
table or range. The lookup_value argument can be a value or a reference. If the 
value you supply for the lookup_value argument is smaller than the smallest 
value in the first column of the table_array argument, VLOOKUP returns the #N/A 
error value.
* table_array Required. The range of cells that contains the data. You 
can use a reference to a range (for example, A2:D8), or a range name. The 
values in the first column of table_array are the values searched by 
lookup_value. These values can be text, numbers, or logical values. Uppercase 
and lowercase text are equivalent. 
* col_index_num Required. The column number in the table_array argument 
from which the matching value must be returned. A col_index_num argument of 1 
returns the value in the first column in table_array; a col_index_num of 2 
returns the value in the second column in table_array, and so on.
If the col_index_num argument is:
* Less than 1, VLOOKUP returns the #VALUE! error value.
* Greater than the number of columns in table_array, VLOOKUP returns 
the #REF! error value.
* range_lookup Optional. A logical value that specifies whether you 
want VLOOKUP to find an exact match or an approximate match:
* If range_lookup is either TRUE or is omitted, an exact or approximate 
match is returned. If an exact match is not found, the next largest value that 
is less than lookup_value is returned. 

Paul
-
“Do all the good you can,
By all the means you can,
In all the ways you can,
In all the places you can,
At all the times you can,
To all the people you can,
As long as ever you can.” - John Wesley
-

 From: Kumar Kishore kishore...@gmail.com
To: excel-macros@googlegroups.com 
Sent: Sunday, October 5, 2014 6:13 AM
Subject: $$Excel-Macros$$ VLOOKUP AND HLOOKUP and MACROS
  


Dear Masters,

Please teach the following functions:-

1. VLOOKUP
2. HLOOKUP and
3.  MACROS



Thank in advance



Regards,


Kishore

-- 
Are you =EXP(E:RT) or =NOT(EXP(E:RT)) in Excel? And do you wanna be? It’s 
=TIME(2,DO:IT,N:OW) ! Join official Facebook page of this forum @ 
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Urgent, Need Help, Formula Problem, Code Problem, and Need Advice will not get 
quick attention or may not be answered.
2) Don't post a question in the thread of another member.
3) Don't post questions regarding breaking or bypassing any security measure.
4) Acknowledge the responses you receive, good or bad.
5) Jobs posting is not allowed.
6) Sharing copyrighted material and their links is not allowed.
 
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2) Don't post a question in the thread of another member.
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$$Excel-Macros$$ VLOOKUP AND HLOOKUP and MACROS

2014-10-05 Thread Kumar Kishore
Dear Masters,

Please teach the following functions:-

1. VLOOKUP
2. HLOOKUP and
3.  MACROS


Thank in advance


Regards,

Kishore

-- 
Are you =EXP(E:RT) or =NOT(EXP(E:RT)) in Excel? And do you wanna be? It’s 
=TIME(2,DO:IT,N:OW) ! Join official Facebook page of this forum @ 
https://www.facebook.com/discussexcel

FORUM RULES

1) Use concise, accurate thread titles. Poor thread titles, like Please Help, 
Urgent, Need Help, Formula Problem, Code Problem, and Need Advice will not get 
quick attention or may not be answered.
2) Don't post a question in the thread of another member.
3) Don't post questions regarding breaking or bypassing any security measure.
4) Acknowledge the responses you receive, good or bad.
5) Jobs posting is not allowed.
6) Sharing copyrighted material and their links is not allowed.

NOTE  : Don't ever post confidential data in a workbook. Forum owners and 
members are not responsible for any loss.
--- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups MS 
EXCEL AND VBA MACROS group.
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to excel-macros+unsubscr...@googlegroups.com.
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For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/d/optout.